Showing posts with label A.J. Pierzynski. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A.J. Pierzynski. Show all posts

Thursday, November 06, 2014

The Second Annual Dan Meyer Awards

During Major League Baseball's award season, the best of the best are featured (maybe not always with the Gold Gloves). And we should celebrate the best. But there is always a flip side. For every best, there was a worst. Saying that does understand that even the worst MLB players in a particular year are among the best players in the world. MLB players are an elite group of talent. So keep that in mind.
Baseball will award its most valuable player. The Flagrant Fan awards what my friend, Mike Hllywa of Off Base Percentage, likes to call the LVPs. These players did not have good seasons. These players were, in most cases, worse than replacement level. These players made fans look at GMs and ask, "What were you thinking?"  Some of these players have big contracts that now look like albatrosses. Like I said, you celebrate the best? You also have to celebrate the worst.
Why are they called the Dan Meyer Awards? That's a long explanation and I will save myself some typing by referring you to last year's award post.  Suffice it to say that Dan Meyer played twelve Major League seasons and compiled -6.5 fWAR and -5.5 rWAR. That was a lot of negative value for that long of a career!
To qualify, each positional player had to have at least 450 plate appearances except for catchers that only needed 350. Here are your 2014 Dan Meyer Awards for the LVPs (h/t to Mike) for each position. We will consider the pitchers in a later post:
Catcher: This one was easy. A.J. Pierzynski was the only catcher in baseball with more than 350 plate appearances that scored in the negative numbers on offense, defense and base running. Quite a few were in the negative for two of the categories, but only AJP nailed the three-fer. The Red Sox released him and then blasted him in the press (anonymously, of course) and then the Cardinals signed him and the guy actually played in the post season. AJP only walked 3.9 percent of the time and had a wOBA of .277.  With positional points because of the importance of catching, it is very difficult to score a negative WAR as a catcher. AJP nailed it.
First Base: This is quite interesting that the first two positions winning this award feature players who played for both the Cardinals and the Red Sox in 2014. And I hate to pick Allen Craig here as it feels like I am piling on. Mr. Craig had a brutal season in 2014 after being feted as the world's best clutch hitter in the years leading up to 2014. Injury probably played a part. Either way, he fell out of favor in St. Louis by a fan base that became enamored with Matt Adams and Craig became part of the trade that brought John Lackey to Cards. Hopefully, the season was an outlier for Craig as his 66 OPS+ for 2014 was half of what it was in the prior two seasons. Craig played a lot in the outfield too in 2014, but we will just limp it all together here. Honorable mention goes to Ryan Howard, but that is another story entirely.
Second BaseAlberto Callaspo had a fairly brutal season for the Oakland A's. His .580 OPS was awful and a hundred and twenty points below his career average. Plus, for the first time in his career, he scored in the negative for his fielding. He is a second baseman who turned 31 in 2014. The early thirties for second basemen is like the age of 27 for rock stars. Careers seem to die quickly at the position. Perhaps Callaspo will rebound. He will need to because his season was one of the rare misses of the Oakland front office. Oh, and Callaspo grounded into 18 double plays too. Ouch.
Shortstop: Yes, all you haters, Derek Jeter wins the Dan Meyer Award at shortstop for 2014. He was 20th in defense (there were worse, believe it or not) and he was next to last in offensive value. Obviously, his age caught up to him and his offense could not make up for his defense. But the commercials were cool and he will be in the HOF in five years. So there you go.
Third Base: This was another easy call. How about a 63 wRC+ and a .260 wOBA? How about being almost two wins below replacement level? How about doing that while not fielding well and not running well? And, he still came to the plate 607 times. Our hero here is Matt Dominguez of the Houston Astros. The former first round pick simply hasn't found himself in the Majors. Dominguez doesn't walk and he doesn't hit. That is a deadly combination combined with not fielding well and not running the bases well.
Left Field: It is safe to say that this is another easy pick. No left fielder has a poorer season than Domonic Brown and like Dominguez of the Astros, the Phillies have hoped against hope that this prospect ship would come in and it foundered instead. Brown was absolutely brutal in 2014. Like Dominguez, Brown had almost two wins below replacement. He had a 75 wRC+ and a .280 wOBA to go along with having a poor season in the field. Either Brown needs a change of scenery or he simply is never going to live up to the hype. Interestingly, Dayan Viciedo was the runner up for the second year in a row. That's hard to do.
Center Field: Fangraphs.com did not have any center fielders with a negative fWAR because of the position importance. Their two lowest ranking CF guys were tied at 0.4 and they were Michael Bourn and B.J. Upton. But Upton gets the nod because he had more plate appearances AND because baseball-reference.com DID rank him in negative territory. Poor Upton has become such a symbol of this new pitching age that he cannot seem to get beyond the mire he has found himself in the last two seasons. New glasses might have helped in the second half. But he still finished with a wRC+ of 74 and he struck out just shy of 30% of the time. Ouch. Fortunately, he is still capable in center field and can still go get the ball because his offense has been an Atlanta nightmare.
Right Field: What in the world happened to Jay Bruce? His OPS dropped a hundred and fifty-three points in 2014 from 2013. He batted his weight and his ISO dropped sixty points. His wins above replacement fell off five wins from the season before on both major stat sites. And while fielding statistics still have their flaws, they tell a story of a guy who fell down in his fielding as well. One big difference became his success against left-handed pitching. His OPS dropped against them by a hundred and eighty points from 2013 to 2014! I suspect that infield shifts hurt him as his BABIP fell to .269. Whatever the case, Bruce went from a very useful and valuable player to terrible in one fell swoop. Let's hope that it was a fluke season and he'll bounce back.
We could probably throw the DH in there too which would be Billy Butler. But he got to the World Series, so he can smile about it now. Adam Dunn was in the building, but at least he hit some dingers, a marketable skill set nowadays.
Thus is the list of Dan Meyer Award winners for 2014. God willing, come back this same time next year for the 2015 awards. And remember that the pitchers are not forgotten. The Kyle Davies Award winners will be announced soon.

Saturday, November 09, 2013

The obscure batting awards of the 2013 MLB season

This is certainly award season on the baseball calendar and aside from all the rumors going on about who is going to sign where or get traded, there is not a whole lot else to talk about. I like to make up my own awards and apparently I have hit on something as my silly awards have led to unprecedented page views. I have covered the major categories such as the worst starting pitching, worst relief pitching and worst overall position player awards. What follows are some more obscure ones.

The Killing Two Birds with one Ball Award
Matt Holliday led both leagues in grounding into double plays. Since he plays on the Cardinals, the killing two birds thing works very nicely. Holliday created 62 outs with his 31 GIDPs. Martin Prado was second with 29 and Billy Butler led the American League with 28.

I like to put these kinds of things into percentages and Holliday also led the majors in GIDP as a percentage of his plate appearances. His rate turned out to be 5.1%. Erik Kratz of the Phillies had only 68 games with the Phillies and still managed to hit into 11 double plays for a 5.0% rate. David Freese was third with a 4.8% rate followed by the only other two over four percent: Prado at 4.4% and Butler at 4.2%.

The Crime Doesn't Pay Award
I forget what the prevailing wisdom is on what stealing success rate is acceptable. Was it 70%? Whatever it is, none of these dudes came close. I don't know if these players tried to steal bases on their own or were sent by their managers. Whichever the case, they should stop. My cut off line was five caught steals. After all, you cannot punish a guy for just trying a couple of times. But if we go by 30% as an acceptable fail rate, the following players, of course, go beyond unacceptable with their fail rates:
  1. 53.8% fail rate: Manny Machado - Six stolen bases in 13 attempts. Robbie Grossman of the Astros had the exact same numbers.
  2. 50% fail rate: Brandon Barnes (11, 22), Gerardo Parra (10,20) and Yoenis Cespedes (7,14)
  3. 47.6% fail rate: Adeiny Hechavarria (11, 21) Was there anything Adeiny did well in 2013??
  4. 45.5% fail rate: Anthony Rizzo, Andrelton Simmons, Todd Frazier (all 6, 11)
  5. 42.4% fail rate: Ian Kinsler (15, 26). Does Ron Washington have a don't steal sign?
  6. 42.1% fail rate: Yasiel Puig (11, 19). The man did run into some outs.
The Down and Outs Award
This award goes to the player who created the most outs with his plate appearances in 2013. Outs are recorded by the number of times a player gets himself out plus caught stealing, sacrifice flies and sacrifice bunts. Our winner is Starlin Castro of the Cubs with 530 outs created. Manny Machado was second with 500 and Mark Trumbo third with 495. 

The Swing Batter Batter Swing Award
Let's face it. There are some baseball players who go up to the plate hacking. They are not interested in working the count or anything like that. Life is short and they are going to swing the bat. The lowest walk percentages this season:
  1. A.J. Pierzynski - 2.1%
  2. Alcides Escobar - 3.0%
  3. Wilin Rosario - 3.2%
  4. Yuniesky Betancourt - 3.4%
  5. Adam Jones and J.P. Arencibia - 3.6%
The batters with the highest swing percentage at balls out of the strike zone were: 
  1. A.J. Pierzynski - 49.6%
  2. Pablo Sandoval - 45.5%
  3. Adam Jones - 44.9%
  4. Alfonso Soriano - 43.3%
  5. Nolan Arenado - 42.8%
The Woe is My wOBA Award
The worst five wOBA statistic recorded in 2013 with a minimum of 400 plate appearances:
  1. Pete Kozma - .241
  2. Alcides Escobar - .247
  3. Adeiny Hechavarria - .251
  4. Darwin Barney - .252 (555 plate appearances)
  5. B.J. Upton - .252 (446 plate appearances)
The Hey Your Infield Fly Is Open Award
The highest infield fly ball percentages were:
  1. Vernon Wells: 20.3%
  2. B.J. Upton: 19.7%
  3. Andrelton Simmons: 17.8%
  4. Jose Bautista. Josh Willingham: 17.6%
The Hit It Where There Are No Screws Award
The lowest line drive percentages in the MLB in 2013 were:
  1. Dan Uggla - 13.2%
  2. Kelly Johnson - 15.2%
  3. Juan Lagares - 15.7%
  4. Yuniesky Betancourt, Jose Bautista - 16.1%
The Hitting 'Em Where They Are Awards
The five lowest BABIPs of 2013 go to:
  1. Darwin Barney - .222
  2. Dan Uggla - .225
  3. Yuniesky Betancourt - .226
  4. David Murphy - .227
  5. J.P. Arencibia - .231

The Stirring the Breeze Award
These five players led the Majors in swinging and missing as rated by their swing and miss percentage:
  1. Yasiel Puig - 16.9%
  2. Pedro Alvarez - 16.4%
  3. Josh Hamilton - 16.2%
  4. Chris Carter - 15.5%
  5. B.J. Upton - 15.3%
The Calculator Not Needed to Total Bases Award
The three lowest total bases accumulated for batters with more than 400 plate appearances were:
  1. Pete Kozma - 112
  2. B.J. Upton - 113
  3. Placido Polanco - 114
Nobody else was under 130.

The Ultimate Sacrifice Award
The most total combined sacrifice bunts and sacrifice flies were:
  1. Zack Cosart - 23 (13 sacrifice bunts plus 10 sacrifice flies)
  2. Elvis Andrus - 22 (16 sacrifice bunts plus 6 sacrifice flies)
The RC Coda Award
RC stands for Runs Created and it is a Bill James statistic for estimating a players contribution to the overall runs a team scored. These two players created the least amount of runs for their team according to B-R:
  • Darwin Barney - 37 in 555 plate appearances
  • Adeinny Hechavarria - 38 in 578 plate appearances
The Punching Judy Award
Pete Kozma became only the third player in this century to record a slugging percentage under .275 with more than 400 plate appearances. The other two were Cesar Izturis in 2010 (.268) and Nick Punto in 2007 (.271).

The At Least I Jacked One Award
This was the first season since 2008 where every batter over 400 plate appearances hit at least one homer. But two guys only hit one homer in 2013. Those would be Pete Kozma and Placido Polanco

The Three Outcome Heroes Award
The following players had the highest percentage of their plate appearances being walks+strikeouts+homers:
  1. Chris Carter - 53.2%
  2. Dan Uggla - 50.3%
  3. Mike Napoli - 49.8%
  4. Adam Dunn - 49.2%

Wednesday, November 06, 2013

Yankees' catchers in 2014

I wrote a piece about who should catch for the New York Yankees in 2014. You can find that piece here at It's About the Money. So who did I go with? Austin Romine? Brian McCann? A.J. Pierzynski, J.R Murphy? Jarrod Saltalamacchia? Click the link and find out.